So what if the shooting’s often spongy, the health system frustratingly archaic and the visuals dated and uneven? Terrific weapons, powers and boss scraps mean the good times come thick and fast with this cult classic.
Available on:
Xbox 360
,
PS3
,
PC
Genre: Shooter Release date: June 29, 2010 Published by: Activision Developed by: Raven Software
As everybody knows how Singularity’s single-player is going to work (turn enemies into dust, fix collapsed staircases, send busted crates back in time and break them open for ammo) we’re not going to recap everything we’ve said in previews past. Multiplayer, however, is an entirely different beast, and one that up until now has been a complete mystery. Wondering how Raven intends to set their game apart from bandwidth-guzzling Activision stablemate Call of Duty? Step forward Lead Game Designer Dan Vondrak...
» Read Full Singularity preview
Nowadays it takes an incredibly honest developer to stand up and admit the game they’re working on takes fewer than eight hours to complete. It’s been a long time since we’ve heard predictions below twice that number. Applying normal PR logic (half the stated game time, then add a quarter), Singularity will actually clock in at around five hours.
» Read Full Singularity preview
Making a first-person shooter that stands out from the crowd must be tough these days. Particularly if it’s being published by Activision who, with Modern Warfare 2, is set to unleash the sequel to one of the most successful first-person shooters of all time.
» Read Full Singularity preview
This time-twisting shooter set in 50s Russia has a few temporal tricks up its sleeve
Feb 02, 2009
A game revolving around the manipulation of time, eh? You’ve probably already dismissed it as something like TimeShift or Prince of Persia, where you’ll use a magical wristwatch to slow down a whirling propeller blade to use as a bridge, or reverse time to stop yourself falling down that ruddy great pit. We certainly did. Great, we thought.
» Read Full Singularity preview
ESRB Rating
Singularity is rated: Mature
Blood and Gore,
Intense Violence,
Strong Language